Printing would understandingly still be a challenge ?
Can Studio one open legacy Notion files? If not, I assume I should still go through the tedious task of opening all legacy projects in Notion, then transfer them to Studio and save the song files for backup.
Although Notion sounds are not as good as Vienna or other pricey software, it surely was good enough for the writing process. Writing score in Studio One however does not have the sounds library of Notion built in and requires a 3rd party Vst instrument library. Is this assumption correct or can I somehow use Notion sounds library in Studio?
You can print sheet music with Fender Studio Pro 8 and also can transfer it to NOTION when you have both applications. NOTION can be used for sheet music; but it's
not something I do. Instead, I use a simplified type of music notation specifically to play VSTi virtual instruments, as well as the native virtual instruments that are included with Fender Studio Pro 8 and Reason 13 (Reason Studios).
London Symphony Orchestra (LSO) is included in Fender Studio Pro 8, so it's there if you want to use it. I also have Miroslav Philharmonik 2 (IK Multimedia), all the Waves, EW ComposerCloud+, and collections and subscriptions; so there are several different ways to work with virtual instruments in Fender Studio Pro 8.
Fender Studio Pro 8 does not open NOTION songs directly, so if you want to get a NOTION song into Fender Studio Pro 8, you need to have NOTION 6 and then to do a "Send" action to get the music notation into Fender Studio Pro 8, which is relatively easy to do, although with a few exceptions where the "secret" is that both applications respond to certain names of specific instruments to do desired mappings.
For example if you have music notation on a staff named "Liberace and Chico Marx Stuff", then it will
not transfer
automagically to a staff called "Piano" or whatever. So the optimal strategy is to use standard names for staves, where "standard names" are the way they are defined in Fender Studio Pro 8 and NOTION 6, with best wishes on discovering the "standard names", although after a while you learn the names to use and it becomes intuitive and natural.
Another equally absurd and silly example is a staff named "The thing Paul McCartney mostly plays". That's not going to transfer
automagically to a bass staff, so you want to name it "Bass".
On the other hand, since I do everything with soprano treble staves which are configured to transpose when necessary, nothing transfers to the correct clef, which works for me. if it's a bass guitar, then I configure the staff to play notes two-octaves lower than notated; and for electric guitar, it's one octave lower than notated. This way everything is "soprano", which is the only clef that is intuitive for me and I can sight-sing.
Regarding arranging, as I explain in Volume 10 of "The Art of Digital Music Production", instead of being focused on specific types of arranging, I have defined what I call the "New Modern Orchestra", where the focus is on
tones and textures and includes every instrument and voice on this planet rather than only the "traditional" instruments and voices of older musical genres. The focus is on the way things sound.
By including everything, you are
not restricted or limited in what you can do in songs!
Defining "arranging" this way makes no sense for the "traditional" perspective on arranging; but it's consistent with the way things work when you are doing digital music production in Fender Studio Pro 8 and have festivals of virtual instruments and elaborate sampled-sound libraries.
Fender Studio Pro 8 has the LSO sounds and a few other instruments and sounds, as well, so until you need a specific sound that is not available from Fender Studio Pro 8 and NOTION 6, you can use what is provided, which are
good sounds that I use from time to time.
You cannot use NOTION sounds in Fender Studio Pro 8; but most or all of them are
included with Fender Studio Pro 8.
I prefer Miroslav Philharmonic 2 (IK Multimedia) for orchestral stuff; but EW ComposerCloud+ and several other subscriptions have lots of tones and textures, with UVI SonicPass having a stellar collection of World Instruments, as well as as foley sounds, music machines, and lots of other useful stuff.
Regarding whether to wander into things like Vienna Symphonic Library (VSL) which is very precise but expensive, it depends on what you are doing. A few years ago, I studied the VSL products catalog and computed that getting everything would cost as much as $20,000 (USD).
The other vastly important consideration is that the songs you create probably are doing to be played through vehicle audio stems, home stereos, iPhones, radio, television, YouTube, and so forth, which although nobody tells you the facts maps to the music and singing being played through amplifiers, sound systems, computers, and smartphones. Specifically, while it might be "logical" to audiophiles and purists, your music and singing is being played by amplifiers, loudspeakers, and headphones which by design tend to push the audible stuff and suppress the noise, which unless you put a compressor-limiter on "traditional" orchestral stuff pretty much destroys dynamics and a lot of other stuff.
Does it matter when your focus is on what one might call "popular music" played on ubiquitous consumer and concert sound reinforcement devices?
Probably not; and at the risk of being perhaps too bold, I am not convinced most folks actually can discern the differences.
When you have a silly song about about Angela Gossow's underpants, is anyone really going to be annoyed because one of the instruments doe not have perfect articulations?
These YouTube music videos are (a) the first song I dd with NOTION 3, LSO, and a few SampleTank and Miroslav Philharmonik (IK Multimedia) instruments and (b) my song about Angela Gossow's underpants, which was done on New Year's Day after I discovered while listening to Daniel Erlandsson's stellar drumming (
a personal favorite) that the lyrics to "Ravenous" (Arch Enemy) include the phrases "carnivorous Jesus" and "I need your blood".
One of the rules here in the sound isolation studio is that including some type of phrases in songs maps to somebody getting a spanking.